Southern Nevada loses ruling on Lincoln County water

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For the moment at least, the Southern Nevada Water Authority has lost the water it hoped to pump to Las Vegas in the first phase of its proposed pipeline across eastern Nevada.

In a strongly worded order issued last week, a district judge overturned a 2008 state ruling that granted the authority permission to tap groundwater from three valleys in central Lincoln County.

Judge Norman Robison ruled that State Engineer Tracy Taylor “abused his discretion” and “acted arbitrarily, capriciously and oppressively” when he cleared the authority to pump more than 6 billion gallons of groundwater a year from Cave, Delamar and Dry Lake valleys.

The senior judge from Gardnerville wrote that the state’s chief water regulator traditionally requires “specific empirical data” before allowing groundwater to be transferred out of a basin. This time, though, the state engineer is “simply hoping for the best while committing to undo his decision if the worst occurs,” Robison wrote.

Authority officials are expected to challenge the judge’s ruling, which spokesman Scott Huntley described as biased and “flat-out wrong.”

“We believe there are numerous grounds for appeal,” Huntley said. “There was some evidence the judge may have come into the case with a prejudged opinion.”

Las Vegas water officials filed applications in the three valleys in 1989 as part of a sweeping grab for unappropriated groundwater across the southern half of the state.

In July 2008, Taylor granted the authority less than half of the water it was seeking in Cave, Delamar and Dry Lake valleys. He also ordered the wholesale water agency to develop a monitoring and mitigation program and to collect data for at least two years before exporting any water from the area.

A month later, a group of ranchers, environmentalists and others opposed to the pipeline challenged Taylor’s decision.

New Mexico-based attorney Simeon Herskovits represents many of those pipeline opponents. In a statement today, he applauded Robison for reversing “an obviously unsound decision by the state engineer.”

“There can be no doubt that the long-term interest of all Nevadans will be best served by the judge’s decision to use common sense and reason in applying Nevada’s water law,” Herskovits said.

The Nevada Supreme Court will hear any appeal brought by the state engineer’s office, the water authority or both.

For now, though, there appears to be some confusion about how state officials should proceed.

Robison ordered Taylor’s decision on the three valleys to be “vacated and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this decision,” but officials don’t know exactly what that means.

“My understanding is there will either be an appeal or we’re right back before the state engineer doing it all again,” Huntley said.

“I think we’re just digesting it right now to be honest with you,” said Susan Joseph-Taylor, the chief hearing officer for the Nevada Division of Water Resources.

Department officials declined to comment further because of the likelihood of an appeal.

A message left for Robison was not immediately returned today.

By as early as 2013, the authority could start pumping groundwater south through a pipeline that could stretch into White Pine County, more than 250 miles away, and cost $2 billion to $3.5 billion.

Cave, Delamar and Dry Lake valleys make up the first phase of the project. The water the authority plans to tap there could supply more than 37,000 Las Vegas homes.

The controversial pipeline was first proposed to feed growth in the Las Vegas Valley, but now it is seen by its backers as an insurance policy for a community that gets 90 percent of its water from a single source: the drought-stricken Colorado River.

Opponents argue that the arid valleys of eastern Nevada cannot sustain large-scale groundwater pumping, which threatens to destroy wildlife and the livelihoods of ranchers and farmers.

In August, water authority board members voted unanimously to forge ahead with the permit process and other preparations for the pipeline.

Authority officials have said they will call for a final vote on whether to the build the project should the surface of Lake Mead slip below 1,075 feet, a low-water mark not seen since 1937 when the reservoir was being filled for the first time.

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